I've lived around databases all my life, 21st century is challenging for them: big data, throughput, complexity, virtualization, global distribution - it's all scalability.
I'm the founder and CTO of ScaleBase, solving this problem is a workoholic's heaven, so I'm having great time!
My agenda is to stay technical, no marketing and sales BS, give my summarized set of views and opinions to urgent topics, events and latest news in database scalability.

Friday, December 21, 2012

I had an Atari, my first computer was Apple IIc, bunch of my friends had a Commodore 64 (I envied them, it was much cooler than the Apple!) and Amiga (wow!!).

Then arrived almost 2 lost decades where people knew* that Wintel is the only thing out there, and couldn't believe there was or ever will be anything else. Just like in the quote from MIB below...

Thank you smartphone, and thank you RIM, Apple and then Google. You made the world a better place.
I know you're not doing anything for us, you're doing it for your own good, to generate value and yield for your stockholders, while pumping ridiculous paychecks to the executives...

Still, you managed to make the world a better, more interesting place to live in, and more challenges to cope with... Big Data, OLTP velocity, app and data sprawl. More challenges for people like me to seek a solution for! You made scalability a big challenge! So, thank you.

BTW, as it turns out to be, I have a Wintel laptop and a Nokia Windows (splendid!) phone, but I'm doing it out of being open minded, and celebrating plurality!

"...Fifteen hundred years ago everybody knew the Earth was the center of the universe. Five hundred years ago, everybody knew the Earth was flat, and fifteen minutes ago, you knew that humans were alone on this planet. Imagine what you'll know tomorrow"

Monday, December 17, 2012

In the last days I got several queries, from colleagues and customers, about one thing I thought it's a given, well well known, but found out differently: "What is database performance?". Is it speed? Is it throughput? What are the metrics and how do you measure?

I tried to refer to an existing link, but then had to write and describe myself. The thing nearest to describing what I think "Database Performance" really is, is this, it's not bad yet I was able to make it even simpler to my esteemed colleagues and more esteemed customers.

Database performance, in an essence, derived from 2 major metrics:
Latency: the time we wait for an operation to finish. Measured in milliseconds (ms) or any other time unit.
Throughput: number of transactions/commands per time unit usually second or minute.

In the classic world of Data Warehouse and Analytics, throughput is usually a non-issue and latency is king. When database grows larger and larger, analytics complex queries take longer and longer to finish, and the demand is "I need speed!".

In the world of OLTP, throughput is the important measure. TPC-C benchmarks for example, measure only throughput (New Order Transactions per Minute). Oracle made it to meet 30,249,688 NO Transactions Per Minute, nice job, we as readers of the results have no way to know if a single transaction tool 1ms and they managed to squeeze thousands of those in parallel in 1 minute to meet this number, or maybe, the scenario transaction took exactly 1 minute, and Oracle managed to perform 30,249,688 such transaction in parallel. The truth is somewhere in the middle, between the 1 millisecond and 1 minute...

In OLTP the latency should be bearable (for some it's 50ms, for some it's 500ms) and stable as throughput must grow and grow as number of users/sites/devices/accounts/profiles grows and grows.

Another key word is predictability. In my OLTP I need predictable good enough, bearable, constant latency performance. I can't afford a 50ms transactions to take 1 minute once every while. I need transactions latency to be some X I can live with, I need it constant and predictable - while throughput is growing.

Not a popular comparison, but very very relevant: A Ferrari and a truck. Both have 500 horsepower.
A Ferrari will take you 200 miles per hour! However a truck will drive a good legal 70, and she'll go same 70 miles per hour with 100 pounds, 1 ton or 20 tons. Constant, stable, predictable. Yea, I'd like to have a Ferrari for my spare time, or to ace a benchmark, but when it comes to backend server infrastructure they're more like a truck to me... and they deliver...

Life's not fair sometimes... at least one of these has definitely got the looks:

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About Me

Technology leader, data and databases expert, hand on system
architect, senior consultant and project manager, with great experience in
understanding various aspects of organizations, distributed applications, and
integration of various technologies, hardware and software solutions.

I'm the founder and CTO of ScaleBase, a venture backed startup company building a next-generation distributed database engine based on standard MySQL databases to bring true cloud elasticity and scale-out capabilities to standard relational databases

An Oracle DBA since 1997, have administered database versions from Oracle7 till Oracle11g. My experience includes a senior and leading DBA in large organizations in the government and hi-tech industries, administering complex databases serving critical applications and data warehouses with large volumes and 24X7 availability, and with integration of almost every feature and product in the Oracle database offering.

An enterprise application software architect since 2001, specializes in the Java/JEE technology stack, with specific focus on Oracle middleware offering – from Oracle9iAS, OC4J and nowadays – the WebLogic platform.